The final day was not one of spectacular pool. Unbearably tense at times, and great viewing, but not spectacular. There were a lot of spectacular shots, to be sure, but none of the players were at their peak best. Only the winner, Aloysius Yapp, came close.
I blame, or credit, the pressure of the event for that. As Gorst said, they were all tired and under a strain. There were going to be misses.
In the end, mistakes were punished. The winners of all three matches made fewer errors in them, and capitalized the most on their opponents mistakes. It was as it should be.
Ko had the critical miss in game 2 on the 8 ball after a surprise Yapp miss. Turned out to be very costly and let Yapp build a 5-0 lead. Feeling the pressure to catch up, Ko then made took some uncharacteristic gambles later in the match that failed to pay off.
Chua erred on safeties a few times vs Gorst, giving Fedor an escape hatch and a chance to build an early lead. Totally befuddling to give Gorst a short and easy jump on one Chua pushout to win the rack. Later Chua had the critical miss on the 6 to the side and the misplayed position on the 4.
Gorst did not break well and Chua should have won, but he needs more discipline in his game.
In the finals, Gorst misplayed position a few times and had to rely on his jump stick too much. Yapp cleaned up and was nearly flawless in the first half of the match.
Gorst caught up, but his habit of falling behind left him little margin for error.
Even so, Yapp gave him an opening or two. But they weren’t easy and Fedor couldn’t make every shot. His habit of falling behind was bound to catch up with him, and it finally did.
Yapp was the deserved winner.
I blame, or credit, the pressure of the event for that. As Gorst said, they were all tired and under a strain. There were going to be misses.
In the end, mistakes were punished. The winners of all three matches made fewer errors in them, and capitalized the most on their opponents mistakes. It was as it should be.
Ko had the critical miss in game 2 on the 8 ball after a surprise Yapp miss. Turned out to be very costly and let Yapp build a 5-0 lead. Feeling the pressure to catch up, Ko then made took some uncharacteristic gambles later in the match that failed to pay off.
Chua erred on safeties a few times vs Gorst, giving Fedor an escape hatch and a chance to build an early lead. Totally befuddling to give Gorst a short and easy jump on one Chua pushout to win the rack. Later Chua had the critical miss on the 6 to the side and the misplayed position on the 4.
Gorst did not break well and Chua should have won, but he needs more discipline in his game.
In the finals, Gorst misplayed position a few times and had to rely on his jump stick too much. Yapp cleaned up and was nearly flawless in the first half of the match.
Gorst caught up, but his habit of falling behind left him little margin for error.
Even so, Yapp gave him an opening or two. But they weren’t easy and Fedor couldn’t make every shot. His habit of falling behind was bound to catch up with him, and it finally did.
Yapp was the deserved winner.